Newspaper Page Text
1f
Published bj the Atlanta San Publishing |
Co«panj.
Alrtnndtr H. Stephen*, • ) ,i.
Archibald H. SpelfbU, S Proprietor*.
J. Hrnijr Smith, J
Alexander H. Stephens, Political Editor, j
A. R. Watson, .... Kerrs Editor.
J. Henly Smith, .... Manager.
XMPlSTlWCT
r
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1871.
Trartllng Ayenti i
J. M. W. HILL. J. If. HEARD,
THE DAILY SUN
Tuesday Morning Jane 27.
HOW TO KEKIt KORlET.
We will be responsible for the' safe arrival of all.]
Another Bourbon in the Field—
What Does it Mean 1
The New York World, in the con-
monev neut u« by Registered totter, by Express, or eluding paragraph of a leading edi-
**■» <*«**»>
person sendiug it. , uses this strong and most pertinent
No paper will be sent from the office till it is paid j l a nfrua<7e *
r. &nd named will alwnva bd erased when the .ime I ® ®
‘‘The Republican party has tumbled
“down piecemeal, ridge-pole, roof, raf
“ters and walls of the grand old Constitu
tion which housed our liberties. The
“winds and rains beat in upon ns from
“every quarter. These architects of ruin
for. and names will always be erased When the .ime
paid for expiree.
Hake np Clubs.
We shall make Thk Sun lively, fresh and intar-
esting—containing all the latest news. We shall
fill It with good reading matter, and shall-have in
each issue as much reading matter as any
Georgia, and we shall soon enlarge and otherwise
improve it, go as to give it a handsome appearance
and make it easily reed and desirable to hava jntCe
family. '* ►.' ■" 14 r * » • t
We ask onr friends to ase a little effort to make np
a club for ns at every post office. See our club rates.
A very little effort is all that is needed to make up a
large list.
To Correspondents.
Mr. Stephens will remain in Crawfordville. His
connection with The 8un will not change his reel-
paper In not hope by lusty screeching for
“guarantees of permanence to two or
“three weathercocks they have set up, to
“divert the Democratic party from re-es-
“tablishing the whole solid structure of
‘ ^dur,government and bequeathing it to
“the use and habitation of this and com-
“ing generations.”
Has anyx>f the “most impractica
ble,” any of the “most deeply fossil-
ed,” or any of tlie “extremest red-
hots” of the Democrats of the Jeffer-
Three Copies......
Ten **
Twenty **
Fifty «•
Single Copies %
5 Cents.
dence. All letters intended for him. either onpri- Ljonian School, North 01’ South, ever
v&te matters or connected with the Political De-1 i * • j
partmont of thi« paper, should be addressed to him I littered StrOllgGr lUllgUtlgB 111 QC11U11
at crawfordville, Georgia. ciation of the acts and usurpations of
All letters on business of any kind, connected with | . , ,, -i • t-v . . xir i
th.su*. except its Political Department, should be the present Ruling Dynasty atWasb-
addressed to J. Henly Smith, JIanager, Atlanta, Ga. ington, OT in the expression of their
i earnest convictions as to what should
HMsviWAAotiee. I ^ f u £ ure objects and policy of the
The readers of The Pun will please take notice, i. • A
that all articles in its columns, written by the Politi- kPWHOCratlC part) 111 tlieir CTlOltS TO
cal Editor and for which he should he held.responsi- I save the. liberties of tills COUUtry, than
bio for argument and language, (typographical errors U g e d in this paragraph by the
excepted), will be signed by the Initial letters of Jiis I 1 J? * ,
name. • * to a. h. s. (deader of tlie JNew Departure pro-
J gramme ?
Terms or Suhaoi iption * j There is, certainly, nothing in the
x - j ring of the metal of a single one of
Per Annum... .7...............i$7 oo the words in this announcement of
Six Months. 4 00 •
Threo Months a oo j the World, which has in it the sligfit-
est tone of the 9th resolution of the
weekly per annum s - j late Pennsylvania Harrisburg Con-
singie copy 7777777.7.7 l 50 vention, which this paper so hastily,
.’7.7.‘*.‘.*.".'.’.*.7.”25 oo cordially and fully indorsed.
60 00 1 That resolution deprecated all allu
sion thereafter to the tumbling down,
by piecemeal or otherwise, of “the raf
ters, roof and walls of the grand old
Constitution, which had so long housed
our liberties” This “tumbling down”
by the Republican party of the sacred
temple of popular rights, that resolu
tion declared in effect had all been
done “in the manner and by the au
thority constitutionally appointed ”
The World) perhaps, is beginning
to. see that it cannot get along in its
efforts to induce th<? Democratic mas
ses any where.to follow in lead of any
such monstrous departure from prin
ciple, truth and devotion “to 'the grand
old Constitution.”
This, perhaps,' is what it means.—
The World, on entering the fight, finds
it: necessary to abandon at the outset
its ‘(New Departure” Platform.
Be that as it may, we take occasion
I to say, that we heartily and fully en
‘validate with even the assent of silence.
“The Democratic party would cease to
‘be Democratic; it would have began to
‘be [not a Bepublican party, but] a
Grant-Radical party—the party of rev
olution, the party of imperialism—if for
“one instant, if in one election, if in one
Congressional district of any State it
“submitted without indignant protest,
“without organized and determined re-
‘sistance, to any and every such intoler
able interpretation of the Constitution
“as it is. It was not alone Democratic
‘Senators who said in opposing the Ku-
“Klux bill—it was Senator Trumbull who
■“said: “The question before us is really
‘a question whether we will revolutionize
‘our govrrnment.” This proposed rev
olution none but Grant Radicals accept.
“Not one Republican of Democratic an
“tecedents can accept it. All Democrats
“at the North, and no Democrats more
“earnestly than the Democrats at the
“South, loathe and set their heels upon
“this plan for converting our Federal
“republic into a solid empire. More
“keenly than the North does the South
“feel that under such an imperial State,
“local liberties would be lost; more keen
ly does the North feel than the South
“that the lasting 'unity of such a mon-
“strons inflexible State would be impos
sible.”
From all this, it very clearly ap
pears to us that if refusing to accept
•glaring usurpations of power as “ac
complished facts”-;—not to be assailed
or arraigned “before the bar of pub
lic reason”—r-eonstitutes a Bourbon;
then all true friends of the Constitu
tion, throughout the United States,
are likely soon to he Bourbons. This
is our understanding of what it
means. Whether the World shall re
main in their ranks or not, time will
decide. A. H. S.
. • [communicated.]
A Matter that Needs Explana
tion.
WEEKLY—SIX MONTHS
Single Copy, Six Months, 1 00
Three «* •• *•
Ten “ “ “
Twenty “ “ “
Fifty “ •* “
3 35
7 00
AS 00
.27 50
No subscriptions, to the Weekly, received for a
shorter period than six months.
All snbscriptlons must bo paid for in advance ;
and all names will be stricken from our books when
the time paid for oxpircs.
Terms of A.d.’vevt lslrvgf.
SQUABKS.
l WEEK
2 WEEKS
3 WEEKS-
1 MONTH.
1 square
$ 3 50
$ 6 00
$ 7 50
•M.
a «
6 00
9 00
> 12 50
3 ••
7 60
12 00
16 00
18 00
4 «
9 00
16 0 0
20 00
24 00
6 “
11 00
18 00
22 00
27 00
6 ••
12 00
20 00
■ 26 00
30 00
7 ««
8 -
14 O0
16 00
22 00
24 00
,-28; 00
31 00
,33 00
36 Or
9 “
18 00
27 00
33 Oi)
38 00
10 «•
20 00
SO 00
36 00
io 00
11 ««
22 OO
32 00
38 00-
42 00
12 ••
24 00
35 00
40 00
44 00
X Colmn
27 00
38 00
43 00
47 00
1 Colmn
40 00
65 00
65 00
75 00
et
• Advertisements in the Local Colnmu marked with
an asterisk, (*j will be charged 25 cents per line each
insertion. - * ■v.v« ■ Vu-‘-1*30 ,
Advertisements under the Special Notice head
(leaded) for less time than one week, will be charged
15 cents per line. . ~
j|®-Advertisements, exceptfor established bugi- [dorse its late declaration that :
ness houses, in this city, must be paid for in ad- j ... , „ ,,, ...
vance “These architects” (the Republican
Noreduclion will be made on the abovo rates for p ar ty S0-Called) “of mill, need not
quarterly, semiannual or yearly advertisements. 17 J 5
_ hope by lusty screeching for guaran-
ArriviU* and| Departures of Trains to I tSCS of permanence to twO Or three
and fromAtianta. weather cocks they have set up, to
th* wxstxbh * .ATLANTIC (ob sxate) BAtuioAD. divert the Democratic Party from rie-
Passenger S ^7777777^ “ establishing the whole solid structure
E^tt^Siw^"7V.77.*.::'.z:w5:S of <nxr Government, and bequeathing
** t0 the use and habitation of this
*he Georgia (AUGUSTA) railboad. and coining generations^
Night Passenger ^^iif^Tv^.f... 8 :*0 a. m TWs iS T uite aS strong Bouvbon-
Night Passenger Train leaves..5:15 p. m %sm as that advocated bv the gallant
Day Passenger Train arrives ......6:20p. m I J °
x>».y Passenger Train leaves......... z..•.•..740a. m Leslie and Carlisle, the present stan-
stone Mountain Accommodation arrives.. .8:05 a. m 1 , * . ’
Stone Mountain Accommodation leaves....6:45a. m dard-beifferS Of the gP.rmiTlA DemO-
MACOR AND WK8TRRN RAILTOAD.
Night Passenger Train arrives . 10:00 p. m
Night Passenger Train leaves..'. 3:28 p. m
Day Passenger Train arrives.............-,2:10 p. m
Day Passenger train leaves .........5:00 a. m
ATLANTA AND WEST POINL RAILROAD.
Night Passenger Train arrives .10:07 a. m 1
Night Passenger Train leaves... 2:45 p. ui
Day Passenger Train arrives 5:00 p. m
Day Passenger Train leaves 7:10 a. m
ATLANTA AND RICHMOND AIR-LINE RAILROAD.'
KegnUr Passenger Tra>n arrives ...4:30 p. m
Regular Passenger Train leaves .7:30 a. m
St. bonli, Memphis, . Washvllle and
Chattanoooga Great Cmtral
Through List. " SkOid
Chattanooga train leaves... .9:60 a.m. and 6:45 p.m.
arrives. ..2:05 p.m. and 3:45 o.m.
Memphis train leaves 4:00 a.ui. and 3:00 p.m.
“ .arrives 9:30 o-m. and6:uo p.m.
St. Louis train leaves 4:(X> a-m.
cratic banner in Kentucky; or any
Democrat in the United States who
has raised his voice against the World’s
heretofore “New Departure” policy.
This is the Jeffersonian Bourbonism
which is. announced as one of the
essential, securities to public liberty,
“the arraignment of all abuses at the
bat of pdblic reason.” - * •
Since the above was penned, the
World of the 22d inst. has reached ns,
In this we see another editorial of
considerable significance. It is headed,
| “J>» «* o» sumtumi”
short extract from this we also com
9:40 a-m.
The.1:50 a.m., 12 m., and 3:30 p.m. trains do
tamnsnmdX 4 * 3 ^ ^ ^ “ d «:«p-a-jmeud to our readers for perusal.
| is in these words:
It
Western Railroad of , Alabai
LEAVE MONTGOMERY 7:00 A. M
ARRIVE AT WAST POINT 11:53
ARRIVE AT COLUMBUS 12:31) P. M.
LEAVE WEST POINT 12:20 “
ARRIVE AT MONTGOMERY 5.45 «
LEAVE SELMA 4:10 4. M.
ARRIVE AT MONTGOMERY 6:40 »
leave COLUMBUS n-.40 4 M
ARRIVE AT COLUMBU8 ....r. 4:15 •*
Macon & Augusta Railroad.
DAT FASHX.NC1XR TRAIN D ILT, SUNS ATS RXPSOTRD.
Leav« Augusta at x. r 't r ..1I-iin lP
^^^u«.;;:;7::::7;::7;:;:: ?government
Arrive at Augusta at l 48
The day psaaaugsr tnuu arriving at Macon at “institqtioiis as the Grant Republicans
. T:40 P. M., and makes close eonnoctions with trains 1 <<ah otiAmnlimr win the flemncruUA n».
. of connecting .roods at Mooon. . Paassngen lmving
Macon at 6 A. M., will make close connection st Ca
ms* with up day passenger train for Atlanta. Athene, I ‘situation’ will they ‘recognize;’
jg^rjgtatateaaBaaa^irws* an-nav hom ^
mar2o u. k. joijnson, Saperintendant. “tones that are dealest to them will they
I “If the Radioal interpretation
“Amendmonts XIII., XIV., and XV.
“were warranted, particularly that inter-
, “pretation of Amendment XIV. which
“finds ground in it for the Ku-Klux act,
“then recognition of the validity of those
“Amendments would be acceptance of an
“accomplished revolution—a revolution
“which lacked bat time to blot oat State
“governments, to expunge the Federal
“government, to make prevail one oon-
. “solidated centralized government. No
T 40 p. h! | ‘‘wHilwrwwolution in the structure of our
I “institutions as the Grant Republicans
“are attempting can the Democratic par-
“ty be brought to ^iccept;* no such
I *— - A *■- — — > awill ♦ Vl ATT ^FO/WVIII
To the Editor of The Sun: Desiring
information upon a matter of some
public importance to Georgians, I beg
small amount of space in your pop
ular journal, and I’ll be brief:
In every issue of a paper .printed
in this city, called the True Georgian,
the following glaring paragraph meets
the reader’s eye:
OUR* ill OTTO—VICTORY.
THE DAILY TRUE GEOR
GIAN WILL FIGHT IT OUT ON
THE ACCEPT-THE-SITUATION
PLATFORM AT ALL HAZARDS,
AT-ANY COST, AND THROUGH
ALL SEASONS.
The editor of-that paper is also
blatant about his Democracy, and
tries to- make superficial readers
believe that he is a very chevalier
Bayard in the cause—sans puer
sans reproche—and that to thd espe
cial keeping of him aind his so-called
True Georgian, has been confided all
that the Democratic party of Georgia
hold sacred now, pr hope for in .the
future!
Now,.some ;oL us in Georgia j who
did not act with the Radical.party in
its palmy dayspas well as some of us
who did not nominate Grant - for
President,, or playiihe extreme parti-
san
not altogether appreciate : this new-
fledged Democracy which has just
sprang up in our bailiwick; and it is
upon this point I seek information.
If I ; am correctly informed, this
great Ajax of the’ True Georgian, but.
recently coming here from the far-off
Territory of Idaho., was formerly the
editor of the New Era newspaper, and
as such aided as largely as any other
man (EEulbert and. Yarney jGaskill
excepted)- in declaring onr. present
Chief Magistrate to. he eleeted; was
in full fellowship with -the -Radical
party in all its actings and doings in
unlawfully amending the ‘. National
Constitution^ and" placing: the whole,
civil establishment of Georgia under
the control of. ignorant, megroes, car
pet-baggers and corrupt political ad
venturers, who have bankrupted the
Treasury, made a mockery of the Ju
diciary, demoralized labor, and; dam
aged bur every material interest.
-From a National stand^point, it may
be said, that the mighty man of the
True Georgian (so-called) was in zealr
ous co-operation with a party whose
record is even more injurious and
damaging, to the whole people. Siif-
ing—but continues to press forward moment for work, study or rest, and
on its mission of ruin. ‘ Peasant, innocent recreation. Get
And now, claiming to wear the ha- for J onr8elf a P tan -
bilimenta of Democracy, and before ncONOttlCAL AHD LOVING WIFE,
an intelligent community, with un- ant ^ try with all your power to render
Uushing effronte^, the editor of the neglectdiwr^herish her^' tlm apple
True (so-called) Georgian absolutely 0 f your eye. Do not try to become
reiterates and endorses, in effect, all learned, rich or great in a day or a
that he has said in past, and not only year. Solid learning, wealth and
proposes himself to stick to all the dev- fatness are plants of ■ slow growth.
.1 have seen a giant oak—monarch ot
ilnmUhe has done as a partisan m thefore8t _ th ft ha<t stained a
the Radical ranks, but is counselling steady growth for a century. That
Democrats to do the same. mighty tree was once lio longer than
If his “ accept-the-situation ” plat- your linger and no larger than a lady’s
form and the “ new departure ” do } have seen the Chattahoo-
, . , , ,. j r T , . ,i I chee flowing m its majesty, broad and
not mean just that, then I desire to q ee p eil0 ugh to float the-navies of a
be enlightened. We all understand i continent; and I have seen the same
the “ situation ”—there is but one.— stream issue from the earth, far up
It has hung over us like a blighting mountain’s side, a tiny rill, that
shadow for more than five vears It 1 could dam U P with foot * Yet ^
shitiiow tor more than five y^rs. ^ that tiny rill> never standing still,
costs a Radical nothing, to accept j flows,
the situation/ , therefore he docs so at I axd FijO'WS as it qrows^
small expense; but I protest that it un til, swelling into the majestic riv-
is a sacrifice of principle which no er, it becomes a blessing to countless
Democrat cannot afford to make. thousands of sentient beings.
And one other point: In glittering ^ nd \ said '■ “Yoking man, imitate
capitals, at the head of the same
umn in whica ve find the accept- Be strong in principle, in in-
the-situation ” creed of the Tr ue-Geor- tegritv and fixedness of purpose, and
gian appears the name of a gallant trusting in a kind Providence, brave
gentleman in nomination for Gbver- blasts of adverse fortune, and the
• , n « n T , . «. , T [furious storms of life that often up-
nor m 1872. I am Ins friend. 1 j ail( j^ prostrate men of faint hearts
sought to have him elevated to that and weak principles. Young man,
high position, whilst the editor of the despise not the day of small things
True Georgian was attempting to Imitate that little rill. Keep moving.
drag him down, and befouling his P° not rto P- Grow ; as you move and
ag, AiiUL , 6 I move as you grow. ( Read, think, ob-
fan;fame IItol 1 hllusions of disloyalty,. reflect]work;‘love. Every day
I failed, while the editor of the True add a little to your stores of knowl-
Georgian and his party, through tlieir edge, wealth, honor and goodness ;
“sharp and quick” tactics, succeeded, and} time, by slow degrees, you will
, , ,7 ■ I , , . ^ become great, and like the mighty
but .the means resorted to. to secure chatta h| och ^ will pr0Te a
their success was believed to have to tliousands.” So mote it be. More
been unusual; and very many good anon. Franklin.
TELEGRAPHIC ITEM§.
- From the Daily Shrh of the 37th Jtlsk
JTkgrm MtUed bp wHSktU.
Cincinnati, Jane 26.—A’negro naa id
Wm. llolton «aa killed instantly to-i .y
by the explosion of a shell, which \ xs
bought as old iron, which he was . -
Crop* M thk I
Chicago, June 26. — Reports fr* ai
about one hundred places in Dlinc s,
Wisconsin and Iowa, with a lew exc< p-
tions, give good accounts of the crops; —
The recent storms have prevailed pretty
generally over the Northwest.
Tmwutoin Out JRxplnl**.
A terrific explosion oocurred at t ie
Franklin House last night. A clothing
merchant named Goodman entered his
room and closed the door. The gas had
been escaping, and as soon as Goodman
struck a" match an explosion occurred,
which knocked out the door and windows,
sprung back the walls, and seriously in
jured Goodman.
gV Jtmdieal MmMhue*
• : Washington, June ,26.—Information
from North Carolina proves the recent
outrages in’ Rutherford county to have
been the work of Radicals, to secure in
terference in the August elections.
The State is reported to be in a qu t
condition. '-Ji
FiiwHGar .Vat for*.
Washington, June 26.—In response -j
inquiries to. day, Mr. Boutwell saidt i
new loan is, for the present, at a sta.
still. He did not seem very sanguine : >
to the efforts of .the Assistant Seeretar .
or the operations of the various hoiu 1
London which have the loan
charge. Four houses have been select
for the purpose, and have all accept, i
the trust; but the fact that France is
putting a large 6 per cent, loan on the
market at 81, while that fof the Unite 1
States can be offered only at par islooke 1
upon as a serious obstruction to success.
In the matter cf calling in a portion
of the 9.20 Bonds, Mr. Boutwell intend
ed that this should be done, as the new
loan is taken, and though the subject has
been talked of, he said nothing respect
ing ^
people think it not altogether certain
that in these days of sharpjmd qnick |
Radical practice that the, man who
gets the most votes will every time be j
declared elected.
What right the True Georgian has |
to associate the name of the gallant j
: -
$10,000 GOME.
Robbery of tlie Southern Ex
press Messenger near Meridian
Miss.
The 3&ckson ’Pilot has learned of
Gordon with snch a creed, and place th bbe ( th { of the ^
him upon sucha platform for the euf- „ ExpKJ ^' o om pany, on hoard of a
frages of true Georgians in -1872, 1 do sonthwafd-boundrtrain on the Mobile
not know. .He has not told the thon- and Ohio Railroad, last Sunday morn-
sands of his friends - in this State that inf,- when within a short distance of
he “accepts'the situation,” as the Meridian. Thp says:
... „7 ™ , . It appears that the tram from tlie
editor of the True Georgian has, or is or tli, and due at Meridian at about
a convert of the “new departure;” nor two a. m^ had,-an express safe of the
has any friend said it for him! , For Southern Express Company on board,
one, I shall believe that Gen. Gor- containg about $10,000 m currency,
don-s name stands in an nnauihortsed
attitude in the columns of the True were seen to jump from the train, bu ;
Georgian until otherwise informed; no attention was paid to tlie fact until
and for his sake let me hope that it the express messenger awoke and
will prove so, if in 1872 he hopes to ^’ on ^ as ®? I ‘t hi 8 £ a<d P§, es ' ^ dl , e . n
, vP _ , „ . rik—, ^ fie says: he discovered the loss of his
get the vote of A Democbat. | mon / y> envelopes> Ba(e and alt He
, says lie had been asleep during : the
From tho Chronicle & Sentinel. last run 0 f about eighteen miles, and
Wbjxt l Have 'Seen'and What I denies, all -knowledge of' the transac-
Said About It—No. 5. tion.
T - ,, ” , ... | j . As soon as possible search was made,
I have Seen thepeh man s son, with p 0 r th e missing safe by the messenger
every advantage of fortune, education and officers'6f t^e-Express Company,
and social position, become poor by After s6in e 'hours had eftpsed the
nqent, or play tne extreme parti- his idleness, prodigahty and been-1 br<^».and- empty safe was found in
in aid of Bullock’s election, do ti° usness > aild sink at last unhonored the woo ds. 'It had evidently been
into a pauper’s grave; and I have seen thrown ofl' the car, then dragged to
the poor mans son, by his, industry, S0IQe underbrush and there forced
sobriety,'energy ana-ictegnty, become !rrn«
r . --. . r- rbecomewifli the head -of/an axA -The
learned, wise, rich, great and honored 0C cupants of a cabin near by stated
and at^eathsdescendtoUB tomb amid that two men had come to their place
the tears and lamentations of admir- iu the night and borrowed their axe,
mg thousands; and I said, ( ‘Qmsgue J giving some excuse, and it was this
sum for tunas faber Every man is the instrument with which the iron chest
architect of his own fortune.” had been broken in.
Energy, probity, application and in- There has been no trace of the rob
domitable resolution and perseverance i hers discovered. No suspicion seems
are to attach to the messenger or the men
BETTER THAN WEALTH AND FOSI- connected with the train.
tionT
marks have escaped its sacriligious
touch,; and the - end is not. yet. A
centralized despotism is what it far
ther toeks! * - - ‘
J This is the --situation briefly
summed up; this is what Radicalism
has accomplished, and what the edi
tor of the True Georgian helped to
accomplish. There lias been no con
cession by that party, it adheres to its
past record—proposes to undo noth
From the Dally Sub «f Jane the 28th.
Indianapolis, June 27.
A valuable deposit of lithographic stone
has been found in Owen county in this
State, which is fully equal to any im
ported from Germany.
Iowa Citt, June 27.
Watson, one of the three English tour
ists, while bathing in the river yesterday,.
was drowned. A telegram was sent to liis
parents in England of sad news.
Nashville, June 27.
The sudden and eventful close of tl ^
distinguished career of Maj. Donalsi. a
causes much feeling here, and common s
in the press on his many and varied vi >
tues exhibit much sympathy.
The census of New York city sliov a
the foreign-bom population to be -411,-
000—a majority of whom are Irish.
Providence, Rhode Island, June 27.
Geo. L. White’s skirt factory at We t -
socket was entirely destroyed by fire a I
11 this morning. The boiler exploded
while the building was burning. No one
injured. Loss 10,000. Insurance 15,-
000.
Sacramento, June 27.
Greer, Fish Commissioner from New
York, arrived here to-day -with 15,000
young shad, to stock the rivers of Cali-
fornia. ' :He: will'depdsit the shad in Sac
ramento river.
►yERSAiLDLES: June 27.—The Pope in
his reply to the address of “Sympathy”
ftpm-French catholics, praises their zeal in
the cause of the church, and of himself,
denounces the liberal Catholicism as an
evil as formidable as revolution or" com
munism.
——
Grant’s Prospects.
Wealth and high social position are
great advantages, but they cannot
compensate for the want of applica-l a Washington letter in the Balti-
tion, morality, energy and industry; more Sun says: “ Whatever may be
neither can the want of these advan- appearances on the surface, it is not
tageskeep down the man of pluck, a t a]} likely that General Grant will
ambition and unfaltering application, j renominated by the Republicans.
Most of the men who have written j The delegation in the National Con-
their names in fairest and highest j vention from the State of New York
characters upon the scroll of I ame, -will doubtless exercise a controling
have been self-made men, with fow influence in that body, and it is not
early advantages of wealth or soeial pro bable that that delegation will be
standing; and, in view of these facts, f or Gen. Grant. On the contrary,
I furthermore said, “Young man, m l0 se who know best conjecture that
would you become a "useful, honora- no matter whether it be the Greeley
file and happy man, and would you aItd Fenton wing or that of Conklin
be mourned when dean, and ‘i ! j a'nd Murphy, in either case it will
lib in ant honored graye? not ultimately -be for Grant. It is
If you would, then put forth your en- much more likely, in the latter event,
ergies. Bo not waste your time in to be for Seward or some new man.”
idleness and vain wishes, nor vour ;— r~
strength upon trifles. Do not throw} The Washington correspondent of
^777^*77 i 7 away your time and money in bar-1 ^be Baltimore Sun of the 23d writes:
fice it, that none of the old land- rooms' and dram-shops, nor your mon- -The testimony before the Ku-Klux
’ | -' eomfi^tee^Uring this week has been
. - JR. Findlay’s Sons.
These enterprising foundry men occu-
py a couple of columns of The Sun this
morning, in pretehting to the public a
description of the machinery they manu
facture and have for sale. We have been
through the extensive establishment ox
this firm, and when we say that their
,work is excellent, itis not to “puff” their
advertisement, asWe have before, in these
columns, given a full description of their
establishment—their facilities for taming
bat ia large quantity of Work, and of their
enterprise in securing the best and most
useful machinery for labor-saving purpos
es. The cotton press manufactured by
them is not excelled, while the horse-pow-
er, of which they make a specialty,- is pos-
itively. the most economical that we have
ever seen. The Messrs. Fincfiays are lii j
men—Georgia raised skilled mechanics,
who work at the business, and who mean
to compete with the energy and enter
prise of all competitors, North or South.
We commend their business to the pat
ronage of the public.
—.
ey arid mfthhfi08^pon lobBff ^
“For the drunkard and the glutton | on the ^ole adverse to those who are
shaUcome to poverty, and idleness charging the existence and outrages
shall clothe a man with rags;” and sneh an organization. The tesfci-
the strange woman’s “house mcliueth mo °y « ee » s to ^ running so much
unto deato,” and her paths unto the the other way that it is quite proba-
dead* None that go unto her return hie that the committee will r»oon ad-
again, neither take they hold of the J CTra oyer ^fi ( e
paths of life. vfWTgKBxtte J The Ohio State Republican Convention
declared against general amnesty in its
platftao. • r
First, strive to establish a character
for veracity, probity, sobriety and en
ergy. Apply yourself to your pro
fession, trade or calling. ‘Use every
Mr. J. H. Nichols, of the beautiful
Nacoochee Valley, the Eden spot of Geor
gia, is in the city, the guest of the H. L
Kimball House. Mr. Nichols is one of
the most successful farmers and stock-
raisers in the State, and is a genial, cul
tivated gentleman. Those who attended
the State Fair last Fall remember the
very’ excellent display made by him in
many-of the departments, and especially
are his beautiful ponies remembered.
Died of Sun-Stroke.
ro yMiiMt fw y* 1
The Chattanooga Times, of the
25th instant, has the following:
John T Lang, a stranger in this city,
died near Chattanooga, Friday morning,
of sun stroke.' : He had lost pis left arm
below the elbow, and said he was in
Longstreet’s army, was about twenty-six
or twenty-seven years old. It is not
known where his relatives live, nor where
bis home was, He stated to some that
his mother was in Atlanta, and to others
that she was in Sonth America. He also
said that he was expecting a remittance
from Memphis. The body wttJ interred
by some'charitable citizens.
Job Printing done at Th* Son Office.
There was
_ found on his
person. Ve make this notice in order
that, if it comes to the eye of any of hi* f
friends, they may identi-y hi»,